Their silence speaks of a determination to capture her; and as if by a plan already preconcerted!
Hitherto she has had but little fear of an encounter with the red rovers of the prairie. For years have they been en paz — both with Texans and Mexicans; and the only danger to be dreaded from them was a little rudeness when under the influence of drink — just as a lady, in civilised life, may dislike upon a lonely road, to meet a crowd of “navigators,” who have been spending their day at the beer-house.
Isidora has passed through a peril of this kind, and remembers it — with less pain from the thought of the peril itself, than the ruin it has led to.
But her danger is different now. The peace is past. There is war upon the wind. Her pursuers are no longer intoxicated with the fire-water of their foes. They are thirsting for blood; and she flies to escape not only dishonour, but it may be death!
On over that open plain, with all the speed she can take out of her horse, — all that whip, and spur, and voice can accomplish!
She alone speaks. Her pursuers are voiceless — silent as spectres!
Only once does she glance behind. There are still but four of them; but four is too many against one — and that one a woman!
There is no hope, unless she can get within hail of the Texans.
She presses on for the alhuehueté.
Chapter LXVII. Los Indios!
The chased equestrian is within three hundred yards of the bluff, over which the tree towers. She once more glances behind her.
“Dios me amparé!” (God preserve me.)
God preserve her! She will be too late!
The foremost of her pursuers has lifted the lazo from his saddle horn: he is winding it over his head!
Before she can reach the head of the pass, the noose will be around her neck, and then —
And then, a sudden thought flashes into her mind — thought that promises escape from the threatened strangulation.
The cliff that overlooks the Alamo is nearer than the gorge, by which the creek bottom must be reached. She remembers that its crest is visible from the jacalé.
With a quick jerk upon the rein, she diverges from her course; and, instead of going on for the alhuehueté, she rides directly towards the bluff.
The change puzzles her pursuers — at the same time giving them gratification. They well know the “lay” of the land. They understand the trending of the cliff; and are now confident of a capture.
The leader takes a fresh hold of his lazo, to make more sure of the throw. He is only restrained from launching it, by the certainty she cannot escape.
“Chingaro!” mutters he to himself, “if she go much farther, she’ll be over the precipice!”
His reflection is false. She goes farther, but not over the precipice. With another quick pull upon the rein she has changed her course, and rides along the edge of it — so close as to attract the attention of the “Tejanos” below, and elicit from Zeb Stump that quaint exclamation — only heard upon extraordinary occasions —
“Geesus Geehosofat!”
As if in answer to the exclamation of the old hunter — or rather to the interrogatory with which he has followed it up — comes the cry of the strange equestrian who has shown herself on the cliff.
“Los Indios! Los Indios!”
No one who has spent three days in Southern Texas could mistake the meaning of that phrase — whatever his native tongue. It is the alarm cry which, for three hundred years, has been heard along three thousand miles of frontier, in three different languages — “Les Indiens! Los Indios! the Indians!”
Dull would be the ear, slow the intellect, that did not at once comprehend it, along with the sense of its associated danger.
To those who hear it at the jacalé it needs no translation. They know that she, who has given utterance to it, is pursued by Indians — as certain as if the fact had been announced in their own Saxon vernacular.
They have scarce time to translate it into this — even in thought — when the same voice a second time salutes their ears: — “Tejanos! Cavalleros! save me! save me! Los Indios! I am chased by a troop. They are behind me — close — close — ”
Her speech, though continued, is no longer heard distinctly. It is no longer required to explain what is passing upon the plain above.
She has cleared the first clump of tree tops by scarce twenty yards, when the leading savage shoots out from the same cover, and is seen, going in full gallop, against the clear sky.
Like a sling he spins the lazo loop around his head. So eager is he to throw it with sure aim, that he does not appear to take heed of what the fugitive has said — spoken as she went at full speed: for she made no stop, while calling out to the “Tejanos.” He may fancy it has been addressed to himself — a final appeal for mercy, uttered in a language he does not understand: for Isidora had spoken in English.
He is only undeceived, as the sharp crack of a rifle comes echoing out of the glen, — or perhaps a little sooner, as a stinging sensation in his wrist causes him to let go his lazo, and look wonderingly for the why!
He perceives a puff of sulphureous smoke rising from below.
A single glance is sufficient to cause a change in his tactics. In that glance he beholds a hundred men, with the gleam of a hundred gun barrels!
His three followers see them at the same time; and as if moved by the same impulse, all four turn in their tracks, and gallop away from the cliff — quite as quickly as they have been approaching it.
“’Tur a pity too,” says Zeb Stump, proceeding to reload his rifle. “If ’t hedn’t a been for the savin’ o’ her, I’d a let ’em come on down the gully. Ef we ked a captered them, we mout a got somethin’ out o’ ’em consarnin’ this queer case o’ ourn. Thur aint the smell o’ a chance now. It’s clur they’ve goed off; an by the time we git up yander, they’ll be hellurd.”
* * *
The sight of the savages has produced another quick change in the tableau formed in front of the mustanger’s hut — a change squally sudden in the thoughts of those who compose it.
The majority who deemed Maurice Gerald a murderer has become transformed into a minority; while those who believed him innocent are now the men whose opinions are respected.
Calhoun and his bullies are no longer masters of the situation; and on the motion of their chief the Regulator Jury is adjourned. The new programme is cast in double quick time. A score of words suffice to describe it. The accused is to be carried to the settlement — there to be tried according to the law of the land.
And now for the Indians — whose opportune appearance has caused this sudden change, both of sentiment and design. Are they to be pursued? That of course. But when? Upon the instant? Prudence says, no.
Only four have been seen. But these are not likely to be alone. They may be the rear-guard of four hundred?
“Let us wait till the woman comes down,” counsels one of the timid. “They have not followed her any farther. I think I can hear her riding this way through the gulley. Of course she knows it — as it was she who directed us.”
The suggestion appears sensible to most upon the ground. They are not cowards. Still there are but few of them, who have encountered the wild Indian in actual strife; and many only know his more debased brethren in the way of trade.
The advice is adopted. They stand waiting for the approach of Isidora.
All are now by their horses; and some have sought shelter among the trees. There are those who have an apprehension: that along with the Mexican, or close after her, may still come a troop of Comanches.